| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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`User.where(id: [[1,2],3])` was equal to `User.where(id:[1, 2, 3])`
in Rails 4.1.x but because of some refactoring in Arel this stopped
working in 4.2.0. This fixes it in Rails.
[Dan Olson & Cristian Bica]
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Simplifies the code slightly, isolates non-nil non-range values into a
single array, which will make it easier to do things like apply type
casting to them in the future.
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This adds the ability for rails apps or gems to have granular control
over how a domain object is converted to sql. One simple use case would
be to add support for Regexp. Another simple case would be something
like the following:
class DateRange < Struct.new(:start, :end)
def include?(date)
(start..end).cover?(date)
end
end
class DateRangePredicate
def call(attribute, range)
attribute.in(range.start..range.end)
end
end
ActiveRecord::PredicateBuilder.register_handler(DateRange,
DateRangePredicate.new)
More complex cases might include taking a currency object and converting
it from EUR to USD before performing the query.
By moving the existing handlers to this format, we were also able to
nicely refactor a rather nasty method in PredicateBuilder.
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